curprev20:3520:35, 12 June 2024 91.132.93.62talk 20,869 bytes+1,191 →Notes: Reexpand. Regarding the FAI debacle there are ample indications (i.e. https://www.yna.co.kr/view/AKR20220906056600009) that it has reached WP:N hence may merit a standalone article with this as starting point. https://nasa.fandom.com/wiki/FAI_definition_of_human_spaceflightundoTag: Reverted
curprev15:2015:20, 20 June 2022 Astrofreak92talkcontribs 19,011 bytes+232 →Timeline: Added citation referring to Boshuizen's status as the first "aussie aussie" going to space, the other Australians gave up Australian citizenship to fly with NASA before dual citizenship was authorized as noted in "other claims" belowundo
curprev18:3118:31, 10 August 2020 Astrofreak92talkcontribs 18,349 bytes+291 Undid revision 971898213 by 89.177.52.179 (talk) States is used in the geopolitical sense here. The original language is correct as it relates to the citizenship of astronauts, the disputed legal status of the Baltic states notwithstanding.undoTag: Undo
curprev16:0316:03, 18 July 2020 Yougurtparfaittalkcontribs 18,372 bytes−414 Deleted conspiracy (depending on your definition of the word) from opening paragraph which stated no countries had performed any space travel, except for one.undo
curprev15:5915:59, 8 October 2019 Astrofreak92talkcontribs 18,366 bytes+260 →Other claims: Thomas and Scully-Power relinquished Australian citizenship when they became American citizens. Aussie law before 2002 forbade dual citizenship. If Thomas had regained Australian citizenship by his last flight in 2004, find a source and correct me!undo
curprev15:5115:51, 8 October 2019 Astrofreak92talkcontribs 18,106 bytes−210 Before 2002, obtaining foreign citizenship automatically removed Australian citizenship. Thomas is currently a dual citizen because the law was changed in 2002, but he was not when he flew into space.undo
curprev04:2004:20, 22 September 2015 Astrofreak92talkcontribs 16,689 bytes+30 Tentative updated map. Using modern boundaries causes some loss of historical detail, but is necessary to depict spaceflights by citizens of post-soviet states.undo
curprev18:4018:40, 27 August 2012 190.19.96.181talk 15,964 bytes+21 The caption is ambiguous enough to warrant a clarification. Furthermore, not everyone who reads this is knowledgeable about the topic. The first time I encountered the text I thought that China had sent someone in the 70s right after Gagarin and Shepard.undo
curprev19:5919:59, 26 August 2012 190.19.96.181talk 15,964 bytes+21 Clarified a caption. The third nation to send its own citizen into space was Czechoslovakia, although not by independent means as he was part of a Soviet mission.undo